Development of a framework for the implementation of synchronous digital mental health: a realist synthesis of systematic reviews (Preprint)

Author:

Villarreal-Zegarra DavidORCID,Alarcon-Ruiz Christoper A.ORCID,Melendez-Torres GJORCID,Torres-Puente RobertoORCID,Navarro-Flores AlbaORCID,Cavero VictoriaORCID,Ambrosio-Melgarejo JuanORCID,Rojas-Vargas JeffersonORCID,Almeida GuillermoORCID,Albitres-Flores LeonardoORCID,Romero-Cabrera Alejandra B.ORCID,Huarcaya-Victoria JeffORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The use of technologies has served to reduce gaps in access to treatment and digital health interventions show promise in the care of mental health problems. However, to understand what and how these interventions work, it's imperative to document the aspects related to their challenging implementation.

OBJECTIVE

To determine what evidence is available for synchronous digital mental health implementation and develop a framework, informed by a realist review, to explain what makes digital mental health interventions work for people with mental health problems.

METHODS

The SPIDER framework was used to develop the following review question: What makes digital mental health interventions with a synchronous component work on people with mental health problems, including depression, anxiety, or stress, based on implementation, economic, quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods studies? MEDLINE, EBM Reviews, PsycINFO, EMBASE, SCOPUS, CINAHL Complete, and Web of Science databases from 1st January 2015 to September 2020 were searched with no language restriction. AMSTAR-2 was used to assess the risk of bias, and CERQual was used to assess the confidence in cumulative evidence. Realist synthesis analysis allowed for developing a framework on the implementation of synchronous digital mental health using a grounded theory approach with an emergent approach.

RESULTS

21 systematic reviews were included in the study. Ninety percent of the studies presented a critically low confidence level assessed with the AMSTAR-2. The realist synthesis allowed the development of three hypotheses to identify the context and mechanisms in which these interventions achieve these outcomes: Hypothesis 1: These interventions reach populations otherwise unable to have access because they do not require the physical presence of the therapist nor the patient, thereby tackling geographic barriers posed by in-person therapy. Hypothesis 2: These interventions reach populations otherwise unable to have access because they can be successfully delivered by non-specialists, which makes them more cost-effective to implement in health services. Hypothesis 3: These interventions are acceptable and show good results in satisfaction, because they require less need of disclosure and provide more privacy, comfortability, and participation, enabling the establishment of rapport with the therapist.

CONCLUSIONS

We developed a framework with three hypotheses that explain what makes digital mental health interventions with a synchronous component work on people with mental health problems. Each hypothesis represented essential outcomes in the implementation process.

CLINICALTRIAL

PROSPERO (CRD420203811)

INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT

RR2-10.12688/f1000research.27150.2

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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